| Don Anderson on Fri, 6 Nov 2015 04:06:46 +0100 (CET) |
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| <nettime> Sherpas and Sahibs in the Sharing Economy |
Here is another in a growing number of critiques of the corporate
"sharing" economy:
http://www.opednews.com/articles/Share-like-a-Sherpa-Class-by-Anthony-Kalamar-Class_Inequality_Language_Sharing-Economy-151026-178.html
Share like a Sherpa: Class Inequality in the "Sharing" Economy
By Anthony Kalamar
The "sharing economy" evokes an image of free, socially-minded
exchange among friends and equals. Yet, it is increasingly clear
that much of what goes by this name today is dependent on, and
exacerbates, social inequality. In truth, the sharing economy is
divided into two classes: Sherpas and Sahibs.
Last year, controversy erupted over the alleged gentrification
of Burning Man by Silicon Valley tech money; among the wealthy
elite's crimes against the Burner ethos was the use of hired help
for many of the less agreeable aspects of the Black Rock lifestyle:
setting up and taking down camps; preparing and serving food and
drinks. Often experienced burners themselves, these workers were
paid not just to make life easier for the noob-leet; but to help
them pick properly unique and self-expressing outfits, to show them
around Black Rock City, to get them safely back to camp after
over-indulging, and, overall, to create and share an experience for
their wealthy employers to enjoy.
Sort of like a hired friend or mentor. They came to be called
"sherpas."
The sherpa phenomenon led to controversy because it is so clearly in
contrast to Burning Man's shared ethic of self-reliance, radical
inclusion, and decommodification. Yet Black Rock City is not the
only place where the values of "friendship" and "sharing" are
invoked to obscure underlying relations of inequality.
The real Sherpas (with a capital S), are, of course, an ethnic group
in Nepal, not a job category. But uses of the word similar to the
meaning used at Burning Man can be found in tech culture ("network
sherpas" and "web sherpas") and gaming ("game sherpas") and beyond.
In the "sharing economy," it is represented by SherpaShare, a
platform that provides statistical support for drivers for Uber,
Lyft, and similar services.
Part of the significance of the growing use of the word "sherpa" in
the sharing economy is that it communicates that these workers, like
the real Sherpas, do more than physical work; importantly, they are
affective laborers who create and share in experiences for the
on-demand enjoyment of others. As George Orwell said, language is
"an instrument which we shape for our own purposes." "Sherpa" is a
word that names a category, a kind of worker, who can then find an
identity and a common interest with each other. Where the word
"sharing" has been used to cover-up the underpaid, precarious
situation of these workers, "sherpa," in response, can be used to
clarify and make visible.
The next step is to determine: what to call those who the
sharing-sherpas work for? That should be easy; just turn to the
history of the original Sherpas, and extend the metaphor an
additional step: sherpas work for sahibs.
The real Sherpas live in the vicinity of Mount Everest. Many of them
make their income by working for extreme tourists--wealthy "job
creators" who make seasonal treks from the richer nations of the
world to climb the famous peaks of the Himalayas, probably for the
purpose of self-discovery or some similar El Dorado. The Sherpas'
job is the sharing of knowledge and experience; it requires the
development of trust, and an intimately shared experience in the
face of the thrill and the danger of the ascent. Helping their
wealthy clientele reach the summit, Sherpas risk injury, extreme
cold, and often death; it must be like working in a coal mine where
the product is adventure.
For decades, the Sherpas addressed their mountaineering employers as
"sahibs," which means "master," a word dating from the British
Empire. They stopped using this word in the 1970s, as part of a
movement to attain greater respect from their employers; but
anthropologist Sherry Ortner, who studied the Sherpas, decided to
keep using the term "sahib" to mark the enduring ethnic and class
distinction between Sherpas and their employers. As she writes,
the word "sahib"
"places the sahibs in the same frame as the Sherpas, a single
category of people being subjected to ethnographic scrutiny. And...
though I do not accept the implication of superiority embodied in
the term (which is of course why the Sherpas stopped using it), I do
not think it is possible to avoid the (ongoing) fact of sahibs'
power over the Sherpas on expeditions; my continuing, somewhat
ironic, use of the term signals this continuing fact."
The sharing economy needs just such a term, to place those who
benefit from the cheap affective labor of the sherpas "in the same
frame" and subjected to the same scrutiny as the sharing sherpas
themselves. Recognizing the two classes of the sharing
economy--sherpas and sahibs--means recognizing the built-in
inequality, the continuing complicity of consumers in the
exploitation of precarious workers, that is the real engine of the
so-called "sharing economy."
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